The mutant down under is the author herself, who undergoes a three-month walkabout
across the Australian Outback and creates this lovely story that restores the Aborigines to their
proper role as the Real People of the continent.

Are the Aborigines untruthful and cowardly? Do they possess poor memory? Is their sense
of smell undeveloped? Do they have no willpower? Do they suffer pain less than others? Do they
have no works of art or history? During her trek the author debunks the myths held by newcomers
to the Real People's continent.

The journey began as a jeep ride to what the author expected would be another rubber
chicken lunch and an award presentation for her good works with the Aborigines. After a six-hour
trip into the desert, she was deposited with a tribe of Aborigines outside a metal building and
asked to don a simple garment for a cleansing ceremony. She watched as her clothes, gold watch,
rings, shoes and undergarments were held over a fire by a woman of the tribe with a big loving
smile on her face. She's cleansing them, too, she thought, and as she watched, to her horror, the
woman dropped them into the flames. Part of her cleansing, it seemed, was to include complete
separation from the artifacts of the mutants.

Then to her chagrin, after some preliminary comments about her passing the cleansing rite,
the entire tribe, her jeep driver and all, began walking into the desert. With only the choice of
trying to retrace the long jeep drive through trackless desert alone or following them into the
desert, she set out with them on the walkabout carrying her only possession in the world at the
time, a rock she had selected during the cleansing ceremony. A rock she was told, "may save your
life ."

Walking in the desert barefoot in 110 degrees over thorny spinifex (beach grass), her feet
became a bloody red mass in which the red-painted toenails seemed to disappear into the color of
her feet. "Focus your attention elsewhere" they told her. She remembered giving similar advice in
her healing ministry and followed it as best she could. At the first stop, one of the women applied
some oils from native leaves and her pain eased. She slept on the ground, ate grubs, ants,
crocodile, kangaroo, and whatever other food the region provided them in response to their daily
prayer to the earth for food.

When the black flies covered her body, crawling inside her nostrils and ears, she felt
herself going mad. The others just stood there and let the flies have their way. The elder of the
tribe explained to her that the flies were cleaning the very crevices that she would need to be able
to breathe during the hottest days of the desert sun, and to hear clearly. Without clear nostrils, she
would have to open her mouth to breathe and would likely die from dehydration.

Slowly she began to grasp the wisdom of the Real People. One day she was told it is her
turn to take the lead. She didn't feel ready to solo, but they made it clear that it was up to her. The
tribe would live or die depending on the decisions she made in the next few days. For three days
they traveled with no food and no water. Soon her throat refused to open and in desperation she
asked inside herself for help. A voice said, "There is the rock." She placed the sacred rock, her
only possession in her mouth. Soon moisture began to form in her mouth, and she could breathe
again. Immediately thereafter she stumbled upon a pool of water and, as they drank joyously, a
huge desert lizard walked by to volunteer for their supper feast.

They arrived at a secret cave, their destination, and she discovered the history of the Real
People written on the cave walls in beautiful pictorial artworks. They admitted her into the crystal
temple which was used for weddings and sacred rites. She read on the wall that the elder of the
tribe, Regal Black Swan, was born on the same day as she was, on the other side of the world, and
that they had been destined to meet after fifty years, so that she could become the messenger of the
Real People to the outside world.

Whether one chooses to believe that this fictional account actually happened to the author
or was pieced together from Aborigine folklore, one must accept that she has portrayed a powerful
image of the powers of the original people of a great continent, powers that we can discover in the
Real People in every one of us, if we dare to look within from now on.

~^~ Over One Million Good Readers A Year as of 2004 ~^~

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